bb4 




-X 




Qass I C. b 4 

Book J^ 7 ^^ U- 5. 



HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES 



RICHARD E. CONNELL 

(Late a Representative from New York) 



MEMORIAL ADDRESSES 

DELIVERED IN THE 

HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES 

OF THE UNITED STATES 

SrXTY-SECOND CONGRESS 



Proceedings in the House 
February 16, 1913 



Proceedings in the Senate 
December 5, 1912 



PREPARED UNDER THE DIRECTION OF 
THE JOINT COMMITTEE ON PRINTING 




WASHINGTON 
1913 



'Cuds' 




d; of d, 

FEB 18 1914 



4- 






TABLE OF CONTENTS 



Page. 

Proceedings in the House 5 

Prayer by Rev. Henry N. Gouden, D. D 6 

Memorial addresses by — 

Mr. Underbill, of New York ' 9 

Mr. Sisson, of Mississippi 11 

Mr. Smith, of New York 16 

Mr. Maguire, of Nebraska 18 

Mr. Reilly, of Connecticut 21 

Mr. Collier, of Mississippi 25 

Mr. Kindred, of New York 31 

Mr. Fitzgerald, of New York 35 

Mr. Ayres, of New York 37 

Proceedings in the Senate 55 

Resolutions adopted 56 

Tributes 39 



[31 



■^s 




">^-^<sf 



HON.RiCHA.RD E.CONNELL 



DEATH OF HON. RICHARD E. CONNELL 



Proceedings in the House 

Monday, December 2, 1912. 
Mr. Sulzer. Mr. Speaker, I offer the following resolu- 
tions and ask for their immediate consideration. 
The Clerk read as follows : 

House resolution 716 

Resolved, That the House of Representatives has lieard with 
profound sorrow of the death of the Hon. Richard E. Connell, 
late a Representative from the State of New York. 

Resolved, That the Clerk be directed to communicate these 
resolutions to the Senate and transmit a copy thereof to the 
family of the deceased. 

The resolutions were agreed to. 

Mr. Cannon. Mr. Speaker, I move you, sir, that out of 
regard for the memory of the late Vice President, the 
Hon. James Schoolcraft Sherman, and the memory of the 
Members of this House and of the Senate who have de- 
parted this life since the adjournment of the last session 
of Congress this House do now adjourn. 

The motion was agreed to; and accordingly (at 1 o'clock 
and 8 minutes p. m.) the House adjourned until to- 
morrow, Tuesday, December 3, 1912, at 12 o'clock noon. 

Friday, December 6, 1912. 
A message from the Senate, by Mr. Crockett, one of its 
clerks, announced that the Senate had passed the fol- 
lowing resolutions: 

Resolved, That the Senate has heard with deep sensibility the 
announcement of the death of Hon. Richard E. Connell, late a 
Representative from the State of New York. 

[5] 



Memorial Addresses: Representative Connell 

Hesolved, That as a further mark of respect to the memory of 
those Representatives (Hon. Richard E. Connell, of New York; 
Hon. Carl Carey Anderson, of Ohio; and Hon. George H. Utter, of 
Rhode Island) whose deaths have been announced the Senate do 
now adjourn. 

Monday, February 3, 1913. 

Mr. Ayres. Mr. Speaker, I ask unanimous consent for 
the present consideration of the following order, which I 
send to the Clerk's desk. 

The Clerk read as follows: 

Ordered, That Sunday, February 16, 1913, be set apart for ad- 
dresses upon the life, character, and public services of Hon. 
Richard E. Connell, late a Representative from the State of 
New York. 

The Speaker. The gentleman from New York asks 
unanimous consent for the present consideration of the 
order. Is there objection? 

There was no objection. 

The order was agreed to. 

Sunday, February 16, 1913. 

The House met at 12 o'clock noon, and was called to 
order by Mr. Doremus as Speaker pro tempore. 

The Chaplain, Rev. Henry N. Couden, D. D., oflered the 
following prayer: 

Our God and our Father, our life and our hope, for in 
Thy keeping is the destiny of men. We gather here to- 
day in memory of men who by dint of industry and faith- 
ful service proved themselves worthy of the confidence 
reposed in them, and have passed on to the reward of the 
faithful. It is well thus to commemorate their service 
and record their history as an example to those who shall 

[6] 



Proceedings in the House 



follow them. Strengthen our faith, encourage our hope, 
and inspire us to noble endeavors, that we may merit the 
confidence of our fellow men and Thy loving kindness. 
Help us and their dear ones to say in all faith, Thy will 
be done. 

So long Thy power has blest us, sure it still 

Will lead us on 
O'er moor and fen, o'er crag and torrent, till 

The night is gone, 
And with the morn those angel faces smile 
Which we have loved long since, and lost awhile. 

In the spirit of Him who brought to light life and im- 
mortality. Amen. 

The Clerk began the reading of the Joinnal of the pro- 
ceedings of yesterday. 

Mr. Hamilton, of Michigan. Mr. Speaker, I ask unani- 
mous consent that the reading of the Journal be dispensed 
with. 

The Speaker pro tempore. Is there objection? 

There was no objection. 

The Speaker pro tempore (Mr. Doremus). The Clerk 
will read the next special order. 

The Clerk read as follows: 

On motion of Mr. Ayres, by unanimous consent, 
Ordered, That Sunday, February 16, 1913, be set apart for ad- 
dresses upon the life, character, and public services of Hon. 
Richard E. Connell, late a Representative from the State of New 
York. 

Mr. Fitzgerald took the chair as Speaker pro tempore. 
Mr. Ayres. Mr. Speaker, I offer the following resolu- 
tions, which I send to the Clerk's desk. 



[7] 



Memorial Addresses: Representative Connell 



The Clerk read as follows: 

House resolution 843 

Resolved, That, in pursuance of the special order heretofore 
adopted, the House proceed to pay tribute to the memory of the 
Hon. Richard E. Connell, late a Representative in Congress from 
the State of New York. 

Resolved, That as a further mark of respect to the memory of 
the deceased, and in recognition of his distinguished career and 
his great service to his country as a Representative in Congress, 
the House, at the conclusion of the memorial proceedings of this 
day, shall stand adjourned. 

Resolved, That the Clerk of the House communicate these reso- 
lutions to the Senate. 

Resolved, That the Clerk of the House be, and he is hereby, 
instructed to send a copy of these resolutions to the family of 
the deceased. 



The resolutions were agreed to. 



[8] 



MEMORIAL ADDRESSES 



Address of Mr. Underhill, of New York 

Mr. Speaker, it is not my purpose to deliver a studied 
eulogy on our late colleague, Mr. Richard E. Connell, 
who departed this life at his home October 30 last, but, 
rather, to render a brief tribute to one whom I had 
learned to love, respect, and admire. 

My acquaintance with our colleague did not begin until 
after the election of 1910. For years previously I had 
known him as an editor of rare sagacity, a Democrat 
who believed thoroughly in the principles of his party, 
who was always ready to carry the standard, no matter 
how inclement the political skies might be and however 
hopeless the outlook for success. He fought for years 
before achieving a personal victory at the polls, and his 
perseverance in presenting upon the stump and through 
the columns of his newspapers his views finally brought 
to him the success he so richly deserved. 

Our brother was a thorough American. His parents 
came from Ireland and were very poor in this world's 
goods. At the age of 13 he was left fatherless and com- 
pelled to assist his mother to earn support for herself 
and the other children. Any man who performs this 
function to the best of his ability and renders that noble 
service to a mother is almost sure to develop into a high 
type of manhood, and our late brother, Mr. Connell, 
certainly typifies this situation. 

He was thoroughly American; he had not had the early 
opportunity for education which he would so much have 
enjoyed. He was a graduate of the school of experience, 
and must have been an omnivorous reader, as he was one 
of the best informed of the many men who have had 
the same alma mater. He appreciated the opportunities 
presented by this country and was full of patriotism. He 

[9] 



Memorial Addresses: Representative Connell 

had only to look upon the Stars and Stripes to receive an 
inspiration for an oration that would make the blood of 
every American tingle with pride. His address on the 
flag at the first Members' banquet of this Congress a year 
ago was an eloquent eflPort full of classical reference and 
was received with many plaudits of praise. 

His remarks upon the occasion of the admission of the 
Territories of New Mexico and Arizona into this Union, 
when he dwelt upon the addition of two stars to the flag, 
will be remembered by all as one of the most eloquent 
addresses made during the present Congress. 

His untimely death just as he was about to be reelected 
was a great shock. Brother Connell had been renomi- 
nated for election to the Sixtj^-third Congress and had 
made a vigorous fight throughout his district. 

He was an excellent orator, and his services were much 
in demand. He had returned to his home after a speak- 
ing engagement for the day and evening, and at mid- 
night left his chauffeur at the front door, with an injunc- 
tion to return early in the morning, as he had an engage- 
ment that day that would take him away from home 
again. The details of his returning to his home, of his 
retiring and never awakening again, I shall not take the 
time to depict. 

As many of his colleagues were unable, owing to the 
exigencies of the campaign, to pay personal tribute to 
his memory by attending his funeral, I ask unanimous 
consent that I may append to my remarks some articles 
appearing in the Poughkeepsie News-Press, which he 
edited before coming to Congress. 

The Speaker pro tempore. Is there objection? 

There was no objection. 

The articles above referred to are printed on pages 39 
to 54. 



[10] 



Address of Mr. Sisson, of Mississippi 

Mr. Speaker, I knew Mr. Connell intimately. He and 
I lived at the same hotel. I frequently talked with him 
about various subjects. Mr. Connell was a Democrat in 
the broadest sense of the word. He believed absolutely 
in the people and their right to control. Trained and 
educated, as has been stated, in the school of hard ex- 
perience, he sympathized with the men who toil, and dur- 
ing all of the conversations that I had with him I never 
heard him utter a selfish thought. I never heard him 
utter an unkind word to or of any human being. There 
was not enough shadow in Richard Connell's soul and 
heart to hide a sinister thought. 

Coming, as he did, of Irish parentage, he knew the his- 
tory of the Irish struggle for libert5% and his soul always 
went out for any people who are striving to get the right 
to rule and govern themselves. He not only believed 
in the general right of the people to rule and control 
everywhere, but he had an abiding faith in our present 
form of Government to insure this if properly admin- 
istered. 

He was an intense State-rights man. He believed in 
the right of local self-government, and he made himself 
extremely close to me on account of the many expres- 
sions of tender regard for the southern people in their 
struggles during the dark days of reconstruction in the 
South. I presume the stories that he heard at the knees 
of his mother and father of the Irish struggle for liberty 
caused him to have such intense love and devotion for a 
people who were unfortunate and for a people who were 
suffering as the people were in the South during those 
dark days. 

[11] 



Memorial Addresses : Representative Connell 

I would invite attention especially to one peculiar 
characteristic of Mr. Connell. I believe he had the 
broadest charity, not only in the sense that he relieved 
the unfortunate and the poor, but in his consideration 
for the thoughts and feelingsof other people. Frequently 
on the street I have seen him help an unfortunate person 
who asked for help. He did it without a moment's hesi- 
tation, and he responded to every call, and with the gift, 
though small, there was a tender regard and sympathy 
which is always more thankfully received than the gift 
itself. His charity was so broad that in measuring the 
faults and foibles of others he was able not onlj' in pri- 
vate life but in public life to overlook the selfishness, to 
overlook the unkindness of others. He felt that it was 
the duty of the people of every age to endeavor to answer 
in the affirmative the question asked in the early history 
of the world, "Am I my brother's keeper?" He felt that 
when a people could answer that question in the affirma- 
tive, and each and every man could say, "Yes; I am 
my brother's keeper," that people would then have 
solved the great questions of government. I believe firmly 
that when we shall have reached that position in our 
development when the great majority of our people can 
feel that they are indeed their brothers' keepers, leg- 
islation here and in the various States will be such as 
will give to all of the people equal opportunitj' and will 
bring about a situation that will realize more nearly 
equal conditions. If we shall be able, as each day goes, 
to add to our stock of information and knowledge, and 
to do that which makes us better tlian we were the day 
before, we will gradually reach that point where each 
and every one of us will begin to realize that we are our 
brothers' keepers. 

No man in this world, no man in this complicated so- 
ciety, if he be a true man, can fail to answer the question 

[12] 



Address of Mr. Sisson, of Mississippi 

in the affirmative. When that time sliall come in the 
history of this Nation that men can answer that question 
in the affirmative, you will find that all of the hatred 
existing between the rich and the poor will disappear. 
We will have laws that will regulate the acquisition of 
property, so that the shrewd cunning of man to acquire 
property through special privilege and special law will be 
at an end. Richard Connell hated with all his Irish 
heart this cunning of the unrighteously rich. If we all 
felt as Connell did on this subject, we would be able to 
more nearly equalize conditions as well as opportunities. 
It has become necessary, in my humble judgment, for the 
legislatures of the country to begin to regulate this intel- 
lectual cunning exercised in the acquisition of property, 
so that all fortunes may have a moral foundation. I 
agree literally with Judge Coleridge, in England, that 
property rights find lodgment in the doctrine of the gen- 
eral good. When the property rights of the present age 
and day and generation shall not be for the general good, 
then property rights ought not to be respected. My de- 
parted friend believed in this doctrine. He believed in 
true progress and true advancement. I am an optimist, 
but I am not so optimistic that I can be blind to the evils 
that surround us. 

The man who is willing to close his eyes to the weak- 
nesses of his social and civil institutions is the man who 
is unable to help his day and generation. 

Connell was more of an optimist than I am. He be- 
lived in the final triumph of good and righteousness. 
And in your private conversations with him he would 
always fill you with hope. When some legislation would 
pass the House that outraged me I would always find 
consolation in talking with my good friend, because he 
always felt that if a wrong was done it would only take 
time to right it. He believed that this gi'eat Government 

[13] 



Memorial Addresses : Representative Connell 

of ours was an example to all the world, and he believed, 
as he said in that beautiful speech on the flag, that it 
was the emblem of equality throughout all the world. 
The example set by American patriots was always to him 
an inspiration. I have often heard him talk about the 
early struggle for American liberty and the part the Irish 
took in it, and I quite agree with him that if it had not 
been for the Irish in the Revolutionary War there could 
have been no success to American arms. 

American liberty was achieved largely by the strong 
arm of the Irish patriots who loved freedom and equality; 
and Connell's Irish heart went out in tender love for 
American institutions, and no opportunity ever presented 
itself on this floor that he was not the first man to fill the 
hearts of his people with patriotism by his eloquent 
addresses. 

He is an example to all of us, because you can always 
point to Richard Connell's life, when you talk to the boys 
in the rural districts who are born in poverty, and say, 
" He overcame difficulties and poverty, and so can you." 
The street gamin in every city can find an inspiration in 
Dick Connell. Why? Because here was a man who at 
14 years of age had upon his shoulders the support of a 
widowed mother. For 16 years after the death of his 
father he worked at everything that his hand could find 
to do until he finally became a reporter on a newspaper 
in Poughkeepsie, and for 23 years he labored in this one 
field and did his people and his party great service, and 
continued to labor on the same newspaper until he came 
to Congress. 

Every boy in Amei'ica born in poverty is blessed. The 
boy who is born in luxury and ease is the boy who is 
cursed. There is no necessity for the boy born with a 
silver spoon in his mouth to devote his time and attention 
to those things that make him a useful man; but the boy 

[U] 



Address of Mr. Sisson, of Mississippi 

who is born in poverty is compelled to struggle in order 
that he may win, and the struggle makes him only 
the stronger. 

So I would point to Dick Connell as an example for 
all the poor boys in America. Look at him, see what he 
accomplished. Any American boy with energy and en- 
terprise can accomplish success. Dick Connell's life has 
been a success; it has been a benediction. And may the 
boys of America learn to do as Dick Connell did, and 
succeed in spite of poverty and in spite of all obstacles. 



[15] 



Address of Mr. Smith, of New York 

Mr. Speaker, it is the rule that men come to Congress 
to learn the procedure and to study the principles and 
policies of government. Mr. Connell had been a student 
of government from his early manhood. He entered the 
House of Representatives two j'ears ago fully equipped 
to take part in the affairs of this Nation. He came 
here not as a pupil but as an instructor. He had been a 
writer of note. He was an eloquent and forceful public 
speaker. He was familiar with every great question 
pending in Congress. From the first day he took his 
seat as a Member of this body he was an essential part 
of the House, and no Member took a more active interest 
in the proceedings or had a more intelligent understand- 
ing of them than did he. 

By education, experience, inclination, and tempera- 
ment he was prepared for the duties that developed upon 
him. He did not devote himself to the selfish demands 
of a locality or to the partisan problems that are ever 
present in a national assembly. He conceived higher 
aims and established loftier ideals. He went into the 
question of admitting the Territories of Arizona and 
New Mexico to statehood. When the division over the 
admission of these Territories appeared to be hopeless, 
he went forward with the contest, scorning consideration 
of political or partisan advantage, until, largely through 
his activity and intelligent persistency, an agreement on 
the admi.ssion of the States was reached. 

Few outside of his close associates knew how hard he 
worked or how much he had accomplished. Despite 
the fact that he had been in Congress but one term, he 



[Ifi] 



Address of Mr. Smith, of New York 

was recognized as a ready and active debater. He was 
ever alert to protect the principles and policies that he 
avowed. Independent in spirit and free from affecta- 
tion, he sought in all that he did to perform the highest 
duty to his country, his district, and himself. He might 
be described as a practical altruist. He was a militant 
idealist. He fought for his principles, and he had faith 
in their ultimate triumph. The House could ill afford 
to lose such a man. The shock and sorrow of his death 
sent a pang into the heart of each one that knew him. 
He was brilliant in conversation, kindly in judgment, and 
simple, direct, and just in all his dealings. He had an 
individuality that had impressed itself on his colleagues. 
A great future seemed in store for him. Those of us 
who were privileged to know him will not soon cease 
to mourn. 



[17] 



Address of Mr. Maguire, of Nebraska 

Mr. Speaker, while we have set apart this day to pay 
tribute to the memory of our lamented colleague, still 
I can not but feel how feeble and inadequate must be 
the effort when we scan the life stoi-j' of our late friend 
and colleague, Richard E. Connell. 

What we say here in the world's greatest parliamen- 
tary forum becomes the written record for to-morrow in 
the larger storj' of a country's growth and a people's 
progress. 

In the perfection of the biographical record of the 
Nation we must of necessity touch lightly and imperfectly 
upon the story of one who played a leading part. While 
these are inadequate attempts of colleagues who know 
but a portion of his life stoiy and, therefore, feel less the 
intensity of his virtues, still our utterances may, in a 
measure, assuage and feebly compensate the loss to a 
beloved family weighed down under almost unbearable 
grief. 

Richard E. Connell was born in Poughkeepsie, N. Y., 
November 16, 1857. He there received his schooling; but 
at the age of 14 years his father died and he assumed 
the larger responsibilities and undertook the work of 
assisting his mother in the support and education of the 
family. Through boyhood and young manhood days his 
time was occupied at various industrial callings, but dur- 
ing these years he devoted his spare time to study and 
the improvement of his opportunities. In 1887 he be- 
came a reporter on the Poughkeepsie News-Press and 
later its editor, remaining with the paper for 23 years. 



[18J 



Address of Mr. Maguire, of Nebraska 

He has been honored by his home people and his State 
in many positions — civic, political, and otherwise — and 
in 1910 was elected to Congress as a Democrat. In the 
midst of an active campaign for reelection to Congress 
he suddenly died at his home on October 30, 1912. Death 
came to him in the prime of life, apparently in the full 
possession of his intellectual and physical vigor. He 
leaves in his immediate family a wife, son, and three 
daughters to mourn his loss. 

When Mr. Connell came to Congress we lived at the 
same hotel, and it was my privilege to come more closely 
in touch with him as a legislator and a man. He was 
companionable, versatile, and cheerful of disposition. 
It seemed as if the candor and honesty of the man and 
the very music and sunshine of his soul enraptured you. 
Modest in manner, unassuming, and big souled, still he 
had a dignity and intellectual courage which commanded. 
Mr. Connell's home life must have been a beautiful one, 
for his true qualities as husband and father were re- 
vealed when he was in the company of his family. 

His early struggle was much the same as that of other 
boys of his time, but through the tragedy of events ob- 
stacles multiplied around him which intensified his 
sacrifice. Through the stern school of necessity and the 
inherent nature of the man he applied and made avail- 
able a large amount of useful knowledge. In earlier 
years he became a great reader of high-class literature 
and a keen observer, who extracted something each day 
from the everyday incidents of life, and through the ad- 
vancing years he became a scholar and an educated man 
in the larger sense and meaning of life's activities. 

There was no duplicity or deceit in Mr. Connell's na- 
ture and he extended no false sympathy and was easy to 
understand; he was clean of mind and pure of soul all 
the way through, and never wavered in his personal con- 

[19] 



Memorial Addresses: Representative Connell 

duct or compromised with wrong. While his own 
standards of conduct were of the highest, still he did not 
exact from others the application of his own belief or 
rule of action. Tolerance of thought, he believed, as- 
sured to every other man the right to act and believe 
according to his own right standards of life. He was a 
devout Christian and each day seemed to bring to his 
soul new inspiration. Faith was an ever-commanding 
force in the life of our departed friend — faith in his fel- 
low man, faith in his country, and faith in his God. To 
him it was a divine command and he did not arrogate 
to himself the right of its interpretation. Although thor- 
oughly informed on matters of faith and religion, still he 
found enough in the business of human affairs to occupy 
his time and intellect, and accepted with childlike sim- 
plicity the faith and commands of the Divine Teacher. 

Mr. Connell loved his country and its institutions, be- 
cause he understood the structure and believed in the 
principles upon which it rested. Many times have I 
heard liim express with feelings of emotion and pride the 
utmost confidence in the wisdom of our people in the 
ultimate destiny of the American Republic. Every 
speech and public utterance of his breathed the lofty 
spirit of patriotism. He was a true American citizen, and 
his State and the Nation will lose in his death a noble 
son and a man whose service will always merit the 
highest praise. 



[20] 



Address of Mr. Reilly, of Connecticut 

Mr. Speaker, it is a singular and sad coincidence that 
two native-born sons of the great State of New York, one 
who had become the beloved Vice President of the 
United States, the other a distinguished Representative 
of one of her congressional districts, should both end 
their life work on the same day. On the 30th of October 
last Richard E. Connell, in whose memory we are here 
assembled to-day, passed away from the activities of this 
world, and on the same day Vice President Sherman 
died. 

It was my good fortune to live with Richard Connell 
for over a year, and 1 had learned to love him for what 
he was worth, a man of the highest ideals, full of senti- 
ment and patriotism and love for his fellow man. 

His newspaper activities for 23 years caused between 
us a fellow feeling that led possibly more even than with 
others to an interchange of ideas. I believe his training 
fitted him particularly for the work he had to do in this 
House, and he came with unusual equipment. 

But aside from his spirited Americanism, largely glori- 
fied by his noble ancestry, it was in the quietness of his 
private life that lay his sweetest charm. He was devoted 
to his family above all things else, devoted to his friends, 
devoted to what he believed to be his life work. Those of 
us who were fortunate enough to hear the magnificent 
speech upon the admission of New Mexico and Arizona 
to statehood will not for a moment doubt Mr. Connell's 
Americanism. No finer tribute was ever paid to the flag 
than he paid on that occasion, when he pictured what 



[21] 



Memorial Addresses: Representative Connell 

the adding of two more stars to that field of blue meant. 
As he was patriotic in speech, so he was in action. Those 
of us who were with him on the occasion of the meeting 
of the new Members of Congress a year or so ago will 
never forget his recital of " The Fighting Race," Joseph 
I. C. Clark's beautiful poem, written upon the occasion 
of the destruction of the Maine, and depicting better than 
our words just what Dick Connell felt to he the prin- 
ciple that should impel men to do their duty, especially 
the duty they owe to their country. 

We will long remember — and I wish I were gifted as 
he was gifted, that I might recite that song of the Celt 
to you to-day as best typifying the fighting spirit for 
righteousness and for liberty that lived and throbbed 
continually in Dick Connell's heart. His own patriotic 
nature was truly shown in those inspiring lines: 

"Read out the names! " and Burke sat back, 
And Kelly drooped his head, 
While Shea — they call him Scholar Jack — 

Went down the list of the dead. 
Officers, seamen, gunners, marines. 
The crews of the gig and yawl, 
The bearded man and the lad in his teens. 

Carpenters, coal passers — all. 
Then, knocking the ashes from out his pipe, 
Said Burke, in an offhand way: 
"We're all in that dead man's list, by Gripe! 

Kelly and Burke and Shea." 
" Well, here's to the Maine, and I'm sorry for Spain," 
Said Kelly and Burke and Shea. 

" Wherever there's Kellys there's trouble," said Burke. 
" Wherever fighting's the game, 
Or a spice of danger in grown man's work," 
Said Kelly, " you'll find my name." 



[22] 



Address of Mr. Reilly, of Connecticut 

" And do we fall short," said Burke, getting mad, 
"When it's touch and go for life?" 
Said Shea, " It's thirty-odd years, bedad. 

Since I charged to drum and fife 
Up Maryes Heights, and my old canteen 

Stopped a rebel ball on its way. 
There were blossoms of blood on our sprigs of green — 

Kelly and Burke and Shea — 
And the dead didn't brag." " Well, here's to the flag! " 

Said Kelly and Burke and Shea. 

" I wish 'twas in Ireland, for there's the place," 
Said Burke, " that we'd die by right. 
In the cradle of our soldier race. 
After one good stand-up fight. 
My grandfather fell on Vinegar Hill, 

And fighting was not his trade. 
But his rusty pike's in the cabin still. 
With Hessian blood on the blade." 
" Aye, aye," said Kelly, " the pikes were great 
When the word was, 'Clear the way!' 
We were thick on the roll in ninety-eight — 
Kelly and Burke and Shea." 
"Well, here's to the pike and the sword and the like! " 
Said Kelly and Burke and Shea. 

And Shea, the scholar, with rising joy. 

Said, " We were at Raraillies. 
We left our bones at Fontenoy 

And up in the Pyrenees. 
Before Dunkirk, on Landen's plain, 

Cremona, Lille, and Ghent, 
We're all over Austria, France, and Spain, 

Wherever they pitch a tent. 
We've died for England from Waterloo 

To Egypt and Dargai, 
And still there's enough for a corps or a crew, 

Kelly and Burke and Shea." 
"Well, here's to good honest fighting blood!" 

Said Kelly and Burke and Shea. 



[23] 



Memorial Addresses: Representative Connell 

" Oh, the fighting race don't die out, 
If they seldom die in bed. 
For love is first in their hearts, no doubt," 
Said Burke; then Kelly said: 
" When Michael, the Irish Archangel, stands, 
The angel with the sword, 
And the battle dead from a hundred lands 

Are ranged in one big horde. 
Our line, that for Gabriel's trumpet waits. 

Will stretch three deep that day 
From Jehoshaphat to the Golden Gates — 
Kelly and Burke and Shea." 
" Well, here's thank God for the race and the sod! " 
Said Kelly and Burke and Shea. 

And here's thank God that it has been my fortune, and 
the fortune of many of us, to have lived and known such 
a true patriot, such a true American, as Dick Connell! 



[24] 



Address of Mr. Collier, of Mississippi 

Mr. Speaker, we have assembled here to-day to pay our 
tribute of respect to the memory of our late colleague, 
Hon. Richard E. Connell, of the State of New York. 

Life is but a brief span; it has its sunshine and its 
shadows; it is characterized by an endless struggle for 
existence, a perpetual striving for advantage, and the 
way is strewn with the wrecks and monuments of those 
who have failed and those who have attained what the 
world calls success. Its uncertain course is a series of 
daily battles in which each of us, no matter how lowly 
our walk in life may be, must play our part. 

In the endless strivings and struggles which mark 
human progress " in the unequal distribution of wealth, 
power, capacity, pleasure, and opportunity," there are 
found on every side tragedy and comedy, sorrow and joy, 
pathos and pleasure, happiness and despair. 

In this great struggle some may wear the victor's crown 
of laurel, while others may go down in dust to dark de- 
feat. For some " breasts may throb with love and lips 
may thrill on meeting other lips as fond, and life shall 
be to them a paradise, while other hearts shall bleed and 
break, and life for them shall be a never-ending night." 

There is so much that we can and should do for each 
other; there are so many ways in which we can lift the 
burdens from other shoulders; there are so many oppor- 
tunities presented for improving the conditions of our 
fellow man, that in the brief space allotted us here on 
earth of right and necessity our concern must ever be for 
the living and not for the dead. 

But yet it is an eminently appropriate custom sanctified 
by long usage that on God's hallowed day we should lay 

[25] 



Memorial Addresses: Representative Connell 

aside the cares and the pleasures, the vexations and the 
trials of life, and reverently gather together to give ex- 
pression to the debt of gratitude we owe our lamented 
dead, and pay a passing tribute of respect to the memory 
of those who have crossed over the river, and " with a 
countenance like the lightning and in raiment white as 
snow " wait upon the other shore. 

Mr. Connell is no more. The kindly heart has ceased 
to beat. Cut down in the verj' zenith of his usefulness, 
suddenly and without warning, his spirit has gone to its 
eternal rest. He has gone, but his cordial greeting, his 
friendly smile, his hearty hand grasp still linger in our 
memories. 

Our late colleague did not serve quite one term in Con- 
gress. He entered here in March, 1911, and died October 
30, 1912. But for over 25 years he was an ardent and able 
advocate of the principles of Democracy. He was the 
editor of the Poughkeepsie News-Press for a number of 
years, beginning his connection with that journal as a 
reporter in 1887. He was often honored by the Demo- 
cratic Party, frequently accepting a nomination at its 
hands when there was no hope of success, but always 
ready and willing to make any sacrifice for the benefit of 
the party he loved. 

It was my good fortune to become intimately ac- 
quainted with Mr. Connell soon after he entered Con- 
gress. This acquaintance quickly ripened into a sincere 
and lasting friendship. We lived at the same hotel, and 
I had ample opportunity to become familiar with those 
sterling qualities of heart and mind which so endeared 
him to all who knew him. 

Mr. Connell was a man of generous heart, of lofty 
ideals, and inspired at all times with a spirit of intense 
patriotism. He was an orator of unquestioned ability. 



[26] 



Address of Mr. Collier, of Mississippi 

Though his legislative career was short, yet, notwith- 
standing his brief service here, on several occasions he 
demonstrated his skill as a logician, his learning as a 
scholar, his profound knowledge of public affairs, and 
his power as an orator. His long training as a journalist 
gave him that experience in marshaling the salient points 
of his argument which is so essential here, where of 
necessity the time for debate is so limited. 

Our departed colleague was a Jeflfersonian Democrat 
of the old school. He had implicit faith and confidence 
in the wisdom, the ability, and the judgment of the 
American people. 

He believed with the great exponent of Democracy that 
" Independence can be trusted nowhere but with the peo- 
ple en masse," for " they are the only sure reliance of the 
preservation of our liberty." 

I have never heard that confidence, that abiding trust 
and faith in the wisdom of the great masses of our peo- 
ple more beautifully and eloquently portrayed than in a 
speech he made on the floor of the House upon the ad- 
mission of New Mexico and Arizona to statehood. His 
speech upon that occasion attracted nation-wide promi- 
nence and elicited much applause from those who had 
the good fortune to be present. 

He was discussing that feature in the bill relating to 
the recall of the judiciary, and, though opposing the recall 
as applied to his own State, eloquently gave expression 
to the confidence he had in the American people. 

" I am convinced, Mr. Chairman," he said, in part, 
" that, so far as the recall is concerned, I voice the pres- 
ent thought of the vast majority of those who sent me 
here when I oppose it as applied to members of the judi- 
ciary or to any other public servant in New York State; 
but when opposition to the recall involves a denial of 
the intelligence and patriotism of the American people 

[27] 



Memorial Addresses : Representative Connell 

suflBcient to warrant confidence in them to exercise that 
power to the safety and honor of the courts, I protest 
against the doctrine plainly defined in that argument. 
Recall or no recall, the courts are safe in the care of the 
people, as arc the destinies of the Republic. If this be 
not true, then who shall mark the limit beyond which 
the people shall not go in government, and who shall 
curtail their power? 

"The gentlemen picture the judge against whom the 
recall has been invoked bj^ 25 per cent of the voters as 
consigned to oblivion and disgrace. Pray, what would 
the 75 per cent of the people to whom the judge would 
resubmit himself be doing in the meantime? 

" Suppose, sir, that by any conception of conditions it 
were possible to-day for the Standard Oil Co. to apply 
the law of recall to the judges of the Supreme Court of 
the United States. Surely it would not be the rabble that 
would be behind such a recall; but should that powerful 
organization, with all its millions and all the ramifications 
of its far-reaching power, array itself behind such a 
movement, do the gentlemen believe that the American 
people would not rally around that court and give such 
an approval to the judges as to dazzle the world by the 
emphasis of their democracy and the splendor of their 
power? And if those who are dissatisfied with the 
Standard Oil decision should invoke the recall, aimed 
at the court, do the gentlemen imagine that the result 
would be different?" 

The man who gave utterance to that statement was not 
afraid to trust the people. 

His lofty ideals of patriotism were beautifully ex- 
pressed in the closing words of that same speech, when 
he said: 

New Mexico and Arizona, this Democratic House of Repre- 
sentatives bids you welcome to tlie Union. Forevermore be rep- 



[28] 



Address of Mr. Collier, of Mississippi 

resented among the stars of the most beautiful banner that ever 
waved between earth and sky. It is the banner whose united 
stars gleam as a beacon of hope to the oppressed of every land, 
and under whose shadow liberty dwells and justice reigns. It is 
the banner for which the Father of his Country prayed that it 
might triumph over tyranny, through every danger withstand the 
enemies of the Republic, and vindicate the inalienable rights of 
mankind. 

Come, New Mexico and Arizona, enter into the Union, for 
whose mission heroes have sanctified with their blood the battle 
fields of a Nation. Come, make still more invincible, still more 
beautiful, the American flag, the truest banner of freedom, the 
sweetest emblem of hope, since the cross cast its redeeming 
shadow upon a lonely hill. 

Mr. Speaker, Mr. Connell will long be remembered by 
those who knew him here. He was faithful to his trust, 
he was devoted to his duties, he was a conscientious leg- 
islator, he was a courteous gentleman and a consistent 
Christian. In his death the people of his district have 
lost a faithful public servant, a sincere friend, and an 
able advocate. 

Upon an occasion of this kind it is our melancholy 
privilege to give to the family of our lamented colleague 
the assurance that though the one dear to them is no 
longer in our midst, yet he is not forgotten, for the tender 
chords of memory will bring back to us the recollection 
of him who, with his kindly word, his cheery smile, his 
gracious and sincere manner, his cordial friendship and 
manly qualities, endeared himself to all who knew him. 

And though his voice is hushed and silent, his familiar 
face is missing, and his vacant chair stands empty, yet — 

I can not say and I will not say 

That he is dead. — He is just away! 

With a cheery smile, and a wave of the hand. 

He has wandered into an unknown land. 

And left us dreaming how very fair 

It needs must be, since he lingers there. 

[29] 



Memorial Addresses: Representative Connell 

And you, — O you, who the wildest yearn 
For the old-time step and the glad return, — 
Think of him faring on, as dear 
In the love of There as the love of Here. 

Mild and gentle, as he was brave, — 

When the sweetest love of his life he gave 

To simple things; — where the violets grew 

Pure as the eyes they were likened to. 

The touches of his hand have strayed 

As reverently as his lips have prayed; 

When the little brown thrush that harshly chirred 

Was dear to him as the mocking bird; 

And he pitied as much as man in pain 

A writhing honey bee wet with rain. — 

Think of him still as the same, I say: 

He is not dead — he is just awayl 

For — 

It is idle to talk of the future, 

Of the sad " might have been " 'mid our tears; 
God knew all about it, 

Yet took him away from the oncoming years. 

God knows all about those who love him. 

How bitter that parting must be; 
And yet through it all God is loving 

And knows so much better than we. 



[30] 



Address of Mr. Kindred, of New York 

Mr. Speaker, it is well that we, in life, should in the 
midst of life's activities pause to sacredly observe an 
occasion like this and to drop a flower and a tear in 
memory of our departed friends. In the exercise of this 
high but sad duty we not only confer some lueasure of 
honor upon those who have gone to " that undiscovered 
country, from whose bourne no traveler returns " to greet 
us again on this material earth, but we at the same time 
cultivate our own conceptions and understanding regard- 
ing the highest of things — that is, what we call life here 
and life hereafter. We ourselves profit in thus meditat- 
ing upon the virtues and even the failings of the lives of 
those who have left us, and in cherishing the sublime 
philosophy leading us to an abiding faith in immortality 
of the soul, which old-fashioned idea, even as a scientific 
theory, is borne out by much recent investigation. 

It is peculiarly fitting, then, that we to-day gather here 
to memorialize the life and character of one of our most 
worthy colleagues, Richcard E. Connell, the late Repre- 
sentative from the twenty-first congressional district of 
New York, who served as a Member of this House with 
honor and distinction from the date of his election, in 
November, 1910, to the time of his death. 

Richard E. Connell was born of rugged Irish parents, 
both of whom — as I have heard him state — came to this 
country as poor emigrants a few years prior to his birth, 
which took place in Dutchess County, N. Y., November 
16, 1857. He died October 30, 1912, very unexpectedly, 
from rupture of the aorta, after severe mental and phys- 
ical strain, incident to his hotly contested campaign for 
reelection to the House of Representatives. He con- 



LSI] 



Memorial Addresses: Representative Connell 

ducted this campaign as he did every other undertaking, 
with marked ability, fairness, judgment, and energy. 
His personal popularity and his force of character be- 
hind it were indicated by his election over a strong and 
distinguished opponent from a congressional district that 
had always previously been overwhelmingly opposed to 
his party's principles. 

He grew up amid the poor surroundings of a family 
who had spent their all to seek their fortunes on Amer- 
ican soil, and as a boy and as a young man sought and 
performed almost any honest work he could obtain, al- 
ways doing his work well and honorably. Not unlike 
the great Lincoln, he was ambitious even as a boy, and 
snatched from such hours of toil every possible oppor- 
tunity for study and mental improvement, going when 
he could to the public schools. 

In his comparatively early manhood he worked his 
way up to the position of local news gatherer or reporter 
in and around Poughkeepsie, N. Y., for the only Demo- 
cratic daily newspaper in that city, the News-Press, which 
he filled for many years so acceptably to his employers 
and to the community that he was made, until he entered 
Congress, the editor in chief of this important paper. 
In this capacity, as editor, Mr. Connell found for many 
years a splendid field for the development and exercise 
of his talents as a writer, thinker, and eloquent public 
speaker, and his talents were in these directions versatile 
and of a high order. This versatility and literary taste 
led him also to keenly appreciate not only general litera- 
ture but also poetry and blank verse, to which he, with 
his usual modesty, occasionally contributed. 

His course and record as a Member of the House and 
as an active member of the Committees on Territories 
and War Claims were such as to win for him the ap- 
proval and friendship of his fellow members and of liis 

[32] 



Address of Mr. Kindred, of New York 

constituents, whom he always faithfully and industriously 
represented. 

We come now to consider him in his more intimate 
and personal relations. Like so many others of the Irish 
race, from which he sprang, his was a choice, lovable, 
and true spirit, shining out most to those who knew him 
best. It was my good fortune to have known him well 
for many years since 1890, when he did reportorial work 
in Poughkeepsie and while I was a physician on the staff 
of the Hudson River State Hospital, located there, and 
with which he had been honorably connected. He was 
always a loyal friend, always held to and acted on the 
highest civic ideals; he was always sympathetic, and was 
one of the broadest, most liberal-minded men I ever knew. 
His was a helpful, hopeful life, shedding its luster of gen- 
erous, cheerful helpfulness upon all with whom he came 
in contact. He was free from affectation; a constructive, 
good citizen and neighbor; a patriotic, patient, consistent 
worker for the upbuilding of his church, his town, his 
State, and his country; but above all these were those 
still nobler qualities as a family man, a faithful, tender, 
devoted husband and father. I was one of several Mein- 
bers of the House who attended his funeral ceremonies 
at St. Mary's Church, at Poughkeepsie, and was pro- 
foundly impressed by the sincere evidences of sorrow, 
love, and respect manifested by the vast throng who 
gathered there to honor him on that solemn occasion, 
representing, as they did, every phase of religious, po- 
litical, and social life. 

A man of Richard Connell's life, character, works, and 
faith still lives; such men do not die, for in the words 
of an unknown author — 

There is no death; the stars go down 

To rise upon some fairer shore, 
And bright in heaven's jeweled crown 

They shine forevermore. 

12266°— 1.^ 3 [33] 



Memorial Addresses: Representative Connell 

There is no death; an angel form 

Walks o'er the earth with silent tread; 

He bears our best-loved things away, 
And then we call them dead. 

Born into that undying life, 

They leave us but to come again; 
In all, in everything, the same. 

Except in grief and pain. 

And ever near us, though unseen, 

The dear immortal spirits tread. 
For all the boundless universe is life; 

There are no dead I 

Mr. Doremus resumed the chair as Speaker pro tem- 
pore. 



[34] 



Address of Mr. Fitzgerald, of New York 

Mr. Speaker, I desire to join in this tribute to the mem- 
ory of our deceased colleague, Richard E. Connell. The 
pressure of public business at this time in the session 
has prevented me from preparing that comprehensive 
review of the life and character of this remarkable man 
which I desired. I did not care, however, to permit the 
occasion to pass without recording my admiration for 
one whom I cherished as a loyal friend. Born in the 
Hudson Valley, he was a typical American citizen. He 
was one of those described by Artemas Ward as of the 
class that went to work at 14 years. All his life was a 
struggle. He was not born with the opportunities or 
advantages of wealth or social position. His only attri- 
butes were character, courage, and determination to do 
the best possible. Like many men born in the Hudson 
Valley, where that majestic stream flows quietly and 
serenely to the sea, and nature stands out in bold and 
picturesque hills beliind which the peace-inspiring val- 
leys are cultivated to advantage, he had a deep, broad, 
and sympathetic nature, and was bold and untiring in 
work and yet was peaceful and loving in manner, all the 
while doing those things which make the world better. 

Mr. Connell came to the House well advanced in life, 
but he had accumulated wide information and had had 
an experience that well equipped him for the arduous 
duties of membership in the House. He was not ambi- 
tious to do things merely for the sensations resulting. 
He was not of the showy kind, and he had no desire to 
attract attention by peculiar and unusual expressions of 
views upon public questions. He was a man endowed 



[35] 



Memorial Addresses: Representative Connell 

with great common sense, with a very wide knowledge 
of the history of this countrj' and of the forces and ele- 
ments that go to make up the country's prosperity. He 
was an industrious man. Those who were acquainted 
with his work in the House are aware that he entered 
with great energy upon the performance of his duties. 
He was one of the many men who come here and con- 
tribute materially to the success of important legislation, 
and yet because their work is done in the quiet of the 
study or in the seclusion of the committee room few 
outside of their colleagues ever know or realize or appre- 
ciate how important the services are which they render, 
or how valuable are their contributions to the country's 
development and well-being. I had learned to know and 
to love Mr. Connell. He had a broad, kind, generous 
heart. He had a loving disposition. He was a loyal 
friend. His friendship was prized by all who knew him. 
It helped to make service in this House more satisfactory 
and more pleasant for many men. 

He has left behind in many ways evidences of the good 
he has done, and his memory will be cherished and re- 
vered by all who had the opportunity and pleasure of 
having come in contact witli him. 



[36] 



Address of Mr. Ayres, of New York 

Mr. Speaker, we are met here to-day to fittingly com- 
memorate the life and public services of our lamented 
colleague, Richard E. Connell. In the term of his serv- 
ice in this House he earned the respect and affection of 
us all. I use the word " earned " advisedly, because Mr. 
Connell came here without the advantage of any pre- 
vious legislative experience, and his career was one of 
continually increasing usefulness and appreciation. He 
was constant in attendance upon his duties, always faith- 
ful to every responsibility. His extraordinary oratorical 
gifts first came to the attention of the House upon the 
occasion of a speech delivered on the bill for the admis- 
sion of Arizona and New Mexico. This gave a fitting 
opportunity for a display of the earnest and brilliant 
patriotism which was his most striking characteristic, and 
his eloquent peroration roused the audience to a high 
pitch of enthusiasm. The State of New York has in re- 
cent years sent to Congress few men who combine the 
ability to perform useful and effective work with the 
gift of eloquent and emotional expression, and Mr. Con- 
nell's future was therefore looked forward to with more 
than ordinary interest. 

Alas, the grim reaper, who is no respecter of person- 
ality, saw fit to remove our colleague upon the threshold 
of a greater usefulness, and we are left to mourn his loss. 
His death was dramatic. Just a week before the elec- 
tion, on October 30 last, in the midst of a hotly contested 
campaign, when the attention of his county and district 
was centered upon his every movement, the end sud- 
denly came. Instantly his city was plunged into profound 

[37] 



Memorial Addresses: REPRESENTAxn^ Connell 

gloom. Flags flew at half-mast, shops were closed, the 
ordinary avocations of citizens were discontinued, thus 
showing the entire respect in which Mr. Connell was 
held alike by his partisans and by those who were po- 
litically opposed. At the memorial ser\'ices, held at St. 
Mary's Church, crowds found it impossible to obtain 
admittance. 

Mr. Connell's life in Washington was but typical of 
his entire career. Born into humble circumstances, he 
progressed ever into constantly greater spheres of useful- 
ness. Every step of advance was earned by faithful serv- 
ice. His life and the great success that attended him 
speak eloquently of the genius of American institutions. 

Mr. Speaker, I ask unanimous consent that leave to 
print upon the life, character, and public ser\ices of Mr. 
Connell be granted for five legislative days. 

The Speaker pro tempore. Is there objection? 

There was no objection. 

adjournment 

Then, in accordance with the resolutions heretofore 
agreed to, at 4 o'clock and 6 minutes p. m., the House 
adjourned until to-morrow, Monday, February 17, 1913, 
at 12 o'clock noon. 



[38] 



Tributes 

[From the Poughkeepsie News-Press, Oct. 31, 1912.] 

HON. R. E. CONNELL'S SUDDEN DEMISE PLUNGES CITY INTO PROFOUND 

GRIEF SAD EVENT ELICITS TRIBUTES OF RESPECT AND SYMPATHY 

FROM COWORKERS IN PUBLIC LIFE, ST.\TESMEN, JURISTS, AND JOUR- 
NALISTS SKETCH OF HIS LIFE. 

Richard E. Connell, Congressman of the twenty-first district, 
and for 23 years editor of the News-Press, was found dead in bed 
by his wife yesterday morning at 7.40 o'clock. Death had 
claimed Mr. Connell while he was asleep, and when his wife 
called him, in order that he might be ready for the automobile 
that was to take him to Middletown at 8 o'clock, she believed that 
he was sleeping peacefully after a hard night of campaigning. 

He had returned home at 2 o'clock in the morning, after deliv- 
ering five speeches and riding 45 miles to his home. When he 
entered the house he was in his usual happy frame of mind. He 
bade Mr. Hawkey, his chauffeur, a happy good morning, and told 
him to be sure to be on time. When he entered the house his 
wife heard him and spoke to him. He answered cheerfully and 
joked about his youngest daughter, Catharine, being asleep in 
his bed. 

" I won't disturb her," he called to his wife; " she's tired, and 
I'll go to the small bedroom and sleep." 

" But you're tired and must have your own room," answered 
Mrs. Connell, whereupon she awakened the daughter, and Mr. 
Connell joked with her as she left his room, expressing regret 
that she should have been disturbed. 

He fell at once into a deep sleep. About 6 o'clock Mrs. Connell 
heard him sneeze twice, and remarked to another of her daugh- 
ters that " papa must be awake." 

He had requested to be called in time that he might be ready 
at 8 o'clock to meet Mr. Hawkey's automobile, and when 7.30 
o'clock came and there was no sign of his having awakened, Mrs. 
Connell went to his room and called to him. 



[39] 



Memorial Addresses: Representati\'e Connell 

There was no reply to her summons. Then she shook him, 
and still he did not reply. Then she laid her hand on his fore- 
head, and its coldness sent a thrill of apprehension through her. 
Again she shook him and there came no reply. Hurriedly she 
threw up the shades and was struck by the pallor of his face. 
Again she called him, but he did not answer her. Then, thor- 
oughly frightened, she called the other members of the family, 
and at once they realized that in the night death had come into 
their midst. 

Death, ever relentless and cruel, respecting not the ties of 
family or friends, is a sad and solemn thing, come when and in 
what form it may. But there are occasions when it is as start- 
ling as it is sad, because of its suddenness and the prominence of 
its victim. We stand appalled when one in the midst of an 
energetic and useful life, and for whom we expect many years 
of devotion to the public weal, is in a moment called from his 
activities by that summons which none may disobey, at a time 
least expected and which to human view appears to be the very 
meridian of existence. 

The announcement that the Hon. Richard E. Connell, Repre- 
sentative in Congress from this district, had died at his home 
early Wednesday morning was received with bated breath and 
tremulously, sorrowfully passed from lip to lip, while some 
sought corroboration by renewed inquiries, as if hoping that it 
might not be true. 

HIS SUDDEN DEATH 

Mr. Connell retired nearly an hour after midnight Tuesday, 
apparently in his usual health but feeling somiewhat tired, intend- 
ing to go to Middletown, Orange County, Wednesday morning. At 
about 7.40 o'clock a. m. his wife went to his room to call him, and 
found him dead in bed. 

The cause of death was heart disease, according to the state- 
ment of Dr. John N. Bassin, who was hastily summoned, but whose 
services were in vain, the struggling spirit having burst the walls 
of its clay tenement and winged its flight. 

Mr. Connell, as is well known, was serving his first term in 
Congress, and had made a record that secured him a hearty and 
unanimous renomination, with full prospect of reelection. He 
had been very active in the present campaign, and was sent by 
the national Democratic committee to speak in Vermont and 
Maine previous to the State elections in September. 

[40] 



Tributes 



IN THE HARNESS 

During the past month he had been addressing meetings in his 
own congressional district, taking in several places daily and 
speaking at each. On Tuesday, the day preceding his death, he 
spoke at Lake Mahopac, Patterson, and Towners in the afternoon 
and at Carmel and Brewsters in the evening. He had intended 
to go to Middletown, Orange County, Wednesday, to meet Hon. 
William Sulzer and make an address there, and speak again in the 
evening at the opera house in this city. 

EARLY DAYS 

Richard E. Connell was the son of the late Richard and Ann 
Phelan Connell, who came to this country from Ireland in 1846. 
Richard was born in Poughkeepsie, November 16, 1857. He at- 
tended St. Peter's parochial school and the public schools until he 
was 13 years of age, when he went to work to support his mother, 
who was a widow with several small children. His employ- 
ment was at labor on the old P. & E. Railroad. Later he learned 
carriage painting in the shop of Streit & Lockwood, and after- 
wards was an attendant at the Hudson River State Hospital. 
While at the latter place he became prominent in amateur theatri- 
cals, his talents in this direction leading to frequent demands for 
his services at social and public affairs. While there he began 
taking an active part in politics and became a forceful speaker. 
One of his speeches at Hyde Park attracted the attention of the 
late Maj. James W. Hinkley, who soon afterwards employed Mr. 
Connell as a reporter on the News-Press. His industry, intelli- 
gence, and fidelity soon won promotion, and in a few years he 
became managing editor, which position he held until April, 
1911, when he commenced his duties in Congress. 

HIS JOURNALISTIC WORK 

Richard Edward Connell was a lucid, convincing writer and 
was versatile withal, frequently dashing off gems of poetry and 
fanciful sketches worthy of celebrated authors. His limited 
school education was supplemented and replenished by much 
reading, keeping informed on current events, and with his many 
duties, and none neglected, he found time for literary culture 
that fitted him for companionship with learned professors and 
talented students. 



[41] 



Memorial Addresses: Representative Connell 

He was a Democrat as a matter of principle, and worked hard 
and faithfully for the advancement of the party of his choice, 
using all honorable means to win success, which he believed 
would in due lime come to those worthy to have it. In 1896 he 
accepted a nomination for Congress against the late Hon. John H. 
Ketcham, when there was no hope of success, and in 1898 and 
1900 was an unsuccessful candidate for member of assembly, in 
each case making a sacrifice for the benefit of the party he loved. 
In 1907 he was appointed inheritance-tax appraiser and held 
that oflice two years. He was police commissioner for three 
years. In 1910 he was elected to Congress by a plurality of 517 
over the Hon. Hamilton Fish, Republican; Mr. Slater, the Prohibi- 
tion candidate, receiving 677 votes. 

CHARACTERISTICS 

Mr. Connell was frequently called on to make orations on the 
Fourth of July, Memorial Day, and for schools, colleges, literary 
societies, religious and other organizations. He had a clear voice, 
spoke fluently and eloquently, the best efforts being entirely 
extemporaneous. 

A strong feature of Mr. Connell's character was his love of 
and pride in his family. On his return from a journey, or an 
absence of only a few hours, the first thing after entering the 
oflice was to take the telephone and talk to his wife and children, 
though he might be going home in a short time. He was the 
champion of the soldiers of the Civil War, and never lost an 
opportunity to honor them and render them any service in his 
power. His work in securing pensions for deserving veterans is 
well known and has endeared him to all the boys in blue. It was 
largely due to his efforts in connection with Gen. Sherwood that 
the last liberal pension bill was passed. 

His record in Congress, especially his speech on the admission 
of the two new States of Arizona and New Mexico, was pro- 
nounced one of the best orations and arguments ever made on the 
floor of the House of Representatives. 

DEVOTED TO FAMILY 

His family consists of his wife, who was Mary E. Miller, his 
daughters, Mary, Anne, and Catharine, and a son, Richard. Mary 
graduated from Vassar College, and Richard is studying in Har- 



[42] 



Tributes 

vard College. During the sessions of Congress the son was his 
father's secretary. To them heartfelt sympathy is extended in 
the sorrow we all share. 

In religion he was a Catholic, a communicant in St. Mary's 
Church, and faithful to his every duty. He was a member of the 
Royal Arcanum, Knights of Columbus, and the Order of Elks. 

In disposition he was a man to win friends and to hold them. 
His fellow workers, who knew him probably best of all, are of 
only one mind in proclaiming their loyal and earnest friendship 
for him. 

TRIBUTES POUR IN 

Tributes which have poured into the city, some addressed to the 
stricken family and others to the News-Press, every hour since the 
news of Mr. Connell's death became curent, are almost Nation- 
wide in their scope, and there is no mistaking their being sincere. 

Foes in the political arena were among the first to come for- 
ward and acknowledge their real feelings of admiration for the 
man as a man. Judges of the highest tribunals in the State, 
municipal officers, associates in Congress — men in every walk of 
life-^joined in the tribute of sorrow. 



[From Edmund Piatt.] 

Nothing had ever occurred either in years of strenuous news- 
paper rivalry or in political rivalry to interrupt the course of my 
friendship with Richard E. Connell. That we were rival candi- 
dates for the same high office this year made no difference. He 
was not a man who could for a moment think of cherishing any 
personal feeling against an opponent. As a newspaper writer 
Mr. Connell was painstaking, just, and accurate. He early de- 
veloped a faculty for writing and for getting hold of news that 
attracted attention, and he had no equals in Poughkeepsie in ex- 
pressing human sympathy or in depicting incidents in which 
pathos was a leading feature. His own sympathetic, generous 
nature and his broad experience, which had brought him much 
into contact with the unfortunate, prompted him to write from 
his heart. 

Let no one think that Mr. Connell's success, that his attainment 
of his ambition to serve his country in high office, was the result 
of luck or chance. As a young man, when he had to work hard, 

[43] 



Memori.\l Addresses : Representative Connell 



he spent his spare time studying the history of his country and 
in other profitable reading. He learned the art of public speak- 
ing, and when opportunity came to attain a position of promi- 
nence he was ready. 

There never was a more genial, companionable man, a better 
friend, or a more generous opponent than Richard E. Connell. 



[From Editor Brown, editor Enterprise.] 

I have always thought very highly of Rich.\rd E. Connell. 
He rose from the humbler walks in life by the sheer force of his 
character. He had ability of a high order, he was true to his 
convictions, and he was true to his friends. He made a good 
record in Congress. He was a fine Representative for the people 
of this district; he was entirely worthy of the high honor that 
came to him in his election two years ago. It is a great loss to 
any community when such a member of it passes away. He 
closed his career in the middle of life, and we must all regret that 
he was not spared to continue a work for which he was well 
equipped and well adapted. 



[From Mark G. Du Bois.] 

In preceding Mr. Connell a few months on the News-Press, to 
which he came, if I remember, in 1887, I was familiar with his 
work and his personality from the start of his journalistic career 
and with the main incidents of his advancement in politics. Mr. 
Connell was equally facile as a writer and speaker. 

In him were combined the poetry, romance, wit, and sentiment 
of the race that rules the world. Always proud of his Irish 
descent, Mr. Connell had just reason for his pride, for in him 
were combined all that is best of those qualities that have brought 
fame to Irish statesmen, orators, poets, writers, and soldiers the 
world over. Out of every reverse and discouragement Mr. Con- 
nell always caught a gleam of humor that made all around him 
smile. Every success elicited a bit of philosophy that made all 
of us think. 



[44] 



Tributes 



At social gatherings where a song or story were needed to 
promote the pleasure and interests of guests Mr. Connell was 
always willing to use his talents for the pleasure of others. He 
gladly prepared speeches and spoke extemporaneously at hun- 
dreds of gatherings where the only reward for his time and 
trouble was the consciousness that he was doing the best he 
could to serve others. 

It is very sad to realize that this brilliant man has been taken 
away from his family who loved him so devotedly, and to whom 
he in turn gave his whole life to help, to comfort and protect; 
that he has been removed from his friends, who trusted, admired, 
and respected him; and that he lived such a short time to enjoy 
the success which came to him after a worthy career of many 
years of hard work. 

I join with the editor of the News-Press and others associated, 
like myself, with Mr. Connell in journalism to lay my tribute to 
his memory before the world. He was a good and useful citizen, 
a credit to his country and his friends, an honor to his family, 
and a fine example of the best in humanity of character, genius, 
and achievement. What Mr. Connell achieved was over ob- 
stacles that few could have faced and overcome as he did. I 
deeply regret his death. 



[Arthur A. Parks.] 

The sudden death of Congressman Richard E. Connell falls as 
a shock in this community. Occurring without any premonition 
in the midst of an ardent political campaign in which he had 
both a personal and professional interest, the sense of fitness 
seems disturbed and the balance of sympathies deranged. 

Mr. Connell's eloquence as a speaker on political subjects 
brought him a reputation and a demand which broadened his 
own scope of vision and enlarged the man. 

Rising from the ranks by his own efforts he attained a success 
far in advance of the usual lot in both business and politics, and 
his loss will be felt in all of his sphere of usefulness. 

We extend our sincere sympathy and condolence to the family 
and friends of Mr. Connell in this hour of their bereavement. 



[45] 



Memorial Addresses: Representative Connell 

[Judge Keogli.] 

New Rochelle, N. Y., October 30. 
Hon. Joseph Morschauser, 

Supreme Court: 
I am shocked beyond expression at the terrible news contained 
in your telegram of the death of Richard E. Connell. May I 
ask you to convey to his family, on my behalf, my deepest and 
sincerest sympathy in this hour of greatest affliction? He was a 
man of sterling ability, a true friend, and a brave and honorable 
adversary. 

Martin J. Keogh. 



[Judge Hasbrouck.] 

Faithful to his beliefs, loyal to his convictions, striving to be 
and to do right, he pursued his straight course until he won the 
high position he held, as well in the esteem of all who knew him 
as in the Government of his country. From a boy driving a 
dump cart on the construction of a railroad right of way to a 
leading Representative of his party in the House of Congress is 
a far step, but that was the breach closed by " Dick " Connell 
through his natural intelligence. 

He had absolutely no extraneous help, but conquered appar- 
ently insurmountable obstacles. He was wholly self-educated, 
but thoroughly well educated. 

A filial son, a devoted husband and father, a true friend — he 
■will be missed and mourned by many. 

His memory will long be cherished and his career should long 
be remembered as an example and stimulus for emulation by the 
youth in this country of magnificent opportunity. 



[William W. Smith.] 

I could have cried this morning when I heard of Mr. Connell's 
death. I counted him as one of my very best friends. I hardly 
know what to say in the way of a tribute to him. I am still 
stunned by the knowledge of his death. 

Mr. Connell was, indeed, a man of rare ability. His attain- 
ments were gained wholly through his own efforts. I have 
watched him ever since I have known him. I know that he 
established in Congress a name that will not soon die. 



[46] 



Tributes 



[Augustus B. Gray.] 

In the death of Richard E. Connell I have lost a friend of 
many years and one who when engaged in the necessary conflicts 
engendered by different political affiliations never deviated from 
the fine sense and high standard of clean political methods which 
characterized his whole public life. 



[Edward E. Perkins.] 

The sudden death of Richard E. Connell has been such a 
shock that I can scarcely find words to express my feelings. 
There has been during my time no man in public life in Dutchess 
County whose character, personality, and achievement have made 
a more lasting impression upon the community. 

From humble origin he rose to be our ablest orator and a 
national figure. His life's ambition was to be a United States 
Congressman, and we of the Democratic Party may be thankful 
that we assisted him in accomplishing his purpose. Had he lived 
until November 5 I believe the people of this district would have 
reelected him triumphantly. 

My heart goes out to his little family, who usurped and enjoyed 
all of the love and affection that his big heart contained. The 
Democracy of this district is bereft of a powerful character by 
the death of Richard E. Connell. His life, however, has been a 
beacon to light the way of American youth to the achievement of 
high purpose and to the accomplishment of laudable ambition. 



[Democratic county committee.] 

Whereas we have learned of the death of Hon. Richard E. Con- 
nell, Congressman from this district and the nominee of the 
Democratic Party for reelection, and under circumstances that 
make his passing away a particularly sad affliction to the mem- 
bers of his family and friends and a great loss to the Demo- 
cratic Party, of which he was an esteemed and respected 
leader: Therefore be it 

Resolved, That we, the members of the Democratic county 
committee of Dutchess County in meeting assembled, do extend 
to his family our sincerest sympathy in this their hour of afflic- 
tion; and be it further 



[47] 



Memorial Addresses: Representative Connell 

Resolved, That this committee pay tribute to the splendid 
character, sterling integrity, and magnificent purpose that have 
always been manifested in his worli as a citizen and an official. 
Resolved, That a copy of these resolutions be forwarded to the 
family of Mr. Connell, spread upon the minutes of this meeting, 
and published in the newspapers. 

Poughkeepsie, N. Y., October 30, 1912. 

William C. Albro, Poughkeepsie. 
Thomas J. Comerford, Poughkeepsie. 
William S. Ketcham, Dover. 



[Chamber of commerce.] 

The following resolutions were passed by the chamber of 
commerce Wednesday night upon the death of Hon. Richard E. 
Connell : 

" The chamber of commerce is again called upon to express 
its profound grief and regret because of the death of one of its 
members, Hon. Richard E. Connell, and wishes to place on rec- 
ord its high estimation of his character. 

" His genius and energy as a man and citizen are shown in the 
success that has always accompanied his private undertakings, 
and his work for his city and his district in the congressional 
body, where he represented both so worthily, remains as a monu- 
ment to his greatness of heart and qualities of statesmanship. 
His fine characteristics as a friend and associate, his courtesy 
and charm of manner, made all who knew him his loving friends. 
He was most loved and respected by those who best knew him, 
and no better testimony of his character can be found than his 
ability to retain the good will, interest, and friendship of his 
neighbors. He has now entered upon those great rewards in the 
hereafter which are received by the just and the good: Be it 

" Resolved, That in the death of Hon. Richard E. Connell not 
only this chamber of commerce but also the city of Poughkeepsie 
and the twenty-sixth congressional district of the State of New 
York have lost a valued and respected Member and Representa- 
tive whom we shall all miss and whose passing we shall pro- 
foundly regret. Be it further 

" Resolved, That a copy of these resolutions be delivered to the 
family of the late Hon. Richard E. Connell and also published 



[48] 



Tributes 

in the News-Press of the city of Poughkeepsie as the expression 
of the profound regret of the chamber of commerce, of which 
body he was so valued a member. 
"Dated October 30, 1912. 

" E. D. GiLDERSLEEVE, President. 

" E. E. Perkins, Vice President. 

" C. W. H. Arnold, Vice President. 

"T. R. Beal, 

" P. C. Doherty, 

" H. S. Reynolds, 

"D. W. Wilbur, 

" Executive Committee." 



[William H. Frank.] 

This is the worst blow I've had in years. 

Why, we were boys together and friends all our lives. I wish 
to express my deepest sympathy for his dear family; they were 
the dearest thing in life to him. 

I'll never forget his tender solicitude for Mrs. Connell and the 
children when we all went out in my yacht for a sail up and 
down the river. He knew every hill and town — the history of 
each — and it was a most beautiful and touching thing to witness 
their love for him. 

No; I simply can not say the things I would like to say. We 
have all lost a prince among men. 



[Prof. S. R. Shear.] 

The death of Hon. Richard E. Connell comes to me as a dis- 
tinct personal shock, an irreparable loss. I had learned to know 
him well and to esteem him highly. He was and will continue 
to be a splendid example to every boy in our city. He believed 
that life is like a road; a splendid place in which to travel, but 
a very poor place in which to sleep and dream. 

Speaking as a schoolman, I may say that his educational creed 
was briefly as follows: 

" Reading is important, but readiness to perceive and to per- 
form are vastly more so. Literature is valuable, but largeness of 

12266°— 13 4 [49] 



Memorial Addresses : Representative Connell 



life and loftiness of purpose are invaluable. Penmanship is 
good, but perseverance is better. Drawing is useful, but without 
diligence no one can be worth while. Science is only a sup- 
plement to sympathy, and history but lays the foundation of hon- 
esty and uprightness." 

Reverence for God, faith in humanity, chivalric regard for 
women, respect for true manhood, sympathy for age and for 
helplessness, fidelity to public trust, hatred of cant and insincer- 
ity, stood forth in his every life relation and marked him as a 
man well calculated to stand before kings. 

His was the vicarious life. He was willing to spend and he 
spent. His heart went out to all humanity, and in striving to lift 
those about him he towered immeasurably toward the lofty ideals 
created by himself for his own guidance. 

He was an honor to our city, a true friend, a noble specimen 
of God's handiwork, and in his going we are left the poorer. 
His memory will be a constant benediction, a fragrance that 
neither time nor eternity can dissipate. 



[Spencer Sladden. ] 

The following unique tribute is from an associate of 11 years: 

Dear old friend of mine, I would not and I could not believe 
the prints to-day when they told me you were gone; but to-night, 
as I stood by your bier and held your cold hand and spoke to you 
and you answered me not, I knew it was all too true. 

And as I stood there, dear old friend and comrade, our 11 
years together hurried through my mind in a panorama of happy 
memories. But why should I, now that you are gone, tell those 
who can not appreciate that which meant so much to you and me, 
the things that were so dear to us in common? They would not 
and could not understand the things that to you and me held such 
a world of meaning. 

Who of all the hundreds that mourn you could ever understand 
the joys and sorrows that were ours — the joys and defeats that 
we met and conquered together in those happy days gone by, 
never to return again? But, dear old friend, your victories meant 
more to me than to all those you knew so well, because we had 
met defeat and had been crushed by it together more times than 
those of to-day will ever stop to remember. 

[50] 



Tributes 

And to-night, as my mind builds bridges back over memory's 
playground to the happy days that have gone never to return, 
memory's fires burn brightly and light the path that you choose 
to open. 

And so, dear friend of mine, I say good night and God bless 
you, and I know the world will be better and brighter for your 
having lived in it, and if there is a lovelier life to come we know 
that your presence there before us will help to add a gleam of 
sweetness and sunshine to the pathway of those who are left to 
follow you. 

So once again, as one who knew better than all others your 
cherished hopes and desires, your sorrows and your joys, I say 
good-by, dear friend, friend of mine, and may God bless and 
light your way to eternal happiness. 



[E. D. Glldersleeve.] 

I considered Mr. Connell a very dear personal friend. What 
I liked best about him was his great love of his home. His 
eager pursuit of truth and knowledge made him intelligent and 
competent to serve his country in the several oflicial stations in 
which he was placed, and he proved himself both efficient and 
faithful to his trust. His life was exemplary and consistent; he 
was wise in counsel, and his endowments of mind and heart 
commanded our highest esteem. We should all be thankful to 
our Heavenly Father for the gift of such a man, one so worthy 
of our love. But we should not complain, for he has finally been 
summoned from the field of conflict to the rewards of the con- 
queror, leaving to his family a legacy, not of lamentation, but 
that of a good name, which shall ever abide in our memory. I 
will close with a clipping I have kept in my Bible for many 
years — a poem written by Mr. Connell himself on the death and 
burial of McKinley, entitled " McKinley's Grave": 

Near two little mounds at Canton, 

At rest till the judgment day, 
Asleep with his little children, 

As if weary of work, of play; 
We bid him good-by forever 

As back to the strife we go; 
How sweet are the years with children 

None but the blessed know. 

[51] 



Memorial Addresses: Representativ'E Connell 

The king in liis tomb of marble. 

Or high in the hall of fame, 
May seem to rest in grandeur 

That trappings and stones proclaim; 
But sweeter the grave in Canton 

Where rests our beloved to-day, 
At rest with his little children. 

Asleep till the judgment day. 



The first organization to call a memorial meeting for Mr. Con- 
nell is the Church of the Good Shepherd, in Newburgh. 

An element of pathos enters into this matter. 

Mr. Connell was to have addressed the men of the church on 
Friday night, November 1, at 7.30 o'clock, at their smoker. 

The meeting will be held, but it will be turned into a memorial 
for the late Congressman, who was well known to the members 
and very popular with them. 



[Other tributes.] 

Further tributes from ex-Senator Newbold, Madison R. Aldrich, 
John K. Sague, Louis P. Haubennestel, D. W. Wilbur, C. N. Arnold, 
John A. Hanna, Isaac Sherrill, and others were received. 

The bereaved family received many telegrams of condolence. 
Among them were the following: 

[Telegrams.] 

Monroe, N. Y., October 30. 
Mrs. Richard E. Connell: 

Just learned of the death of your distinguished husband. I 
have lost a dear friend, and in your sad bereavement I send you 
and all the family my heartfelt sympathy. 

William Sulzer. 



[52] 



Tributes 

New York, October 30. 
Mrs. Richard E. Connell: 

I am terribly shocked, and assure you that I sorrow and sympa- 
thize with you, and regret extremely that I am not well enough 
to leave my room. 

Franklin D. Roosevelt. 

New York, October 30. 
Mrs. Richard E. Connell: 

Accept my sincere sympathy in your bereavement. Mr. Con- 
nell will be greatly missed in Congress and by his many friends. 

Francis Burton Harrison. 



New York, October 30. 
Mrs. Richard E. Connell: 

Sincere sympathy in your sorrow. Dutchess County has lost a 
loyal son. 

Francis G. Landon. 



New York, October 30. 
Mrs. Richard E. Connell: 

Please accept my deepest sympathy. Your great loss is shared 
by all who knew your husband. 

Perry Belmont. 



Catskill, N. Y., October 30, 1912. 
Mrs. Richard E. Connell: 

I extend to you my deepest sympathy in the death of your 
husband. He was my valued friend, and I share with you in 
large measure your sorrow in this afQiction. 

Clarence E. Bloodgood. 



funeral SATURDAY 

The funeral arrangements were completed late Wednesday 
evening. 

Services will be held at the house at 9.45 Saturday morning and 
at St. Mary's Church at 10.30. Many out-of-town clergymen will 
be present at the church service. 

Mrs. Connell is completely prostrated by the terrible blow. 



[53] 



Memorial Addresses: Representative Connell 

Richard E. Connell, jr., who was studying in Harvard, was 
summoned through a telegram which stated that his father was 
ill. He arrived in Poughkeepsie at 8.16 p. m., and only learned 
the tragic news when he arrived at the family home. 



[Editorial from Poughkeepsie News-Press.] 
HICHARD E. CONNELL 

Richard E. Connell was one of the most conspicuous examples 
of the self-made man that this community has known in a gener- 
ation. His public and private life was clean from start to fin- 
ish. That is a splendid thing to be able to say of any man, but it 
is not sufficient to say of Mr. Connell. He chose early and de- 
termined to seek knowledge in order to become a factor and a 
force for all that is good and worthy and righteous among his 
fellows, and in the face of crushing odds he succeeded, and so 
well that his sudden taking away causes genuine sorrow and 
regret. 

He had long ago achieved a fair measure of success in this 
locality as an educator, writer, and champion of what he thought 
was right, but his crowning success came when he was made a 
Congressman and was given a bigger field. There he had already 
made splendid progress, and those same qualities which have 
caused him to be respected at home had marked him for distinc- 
tion abroad. It is entirely fair to say that the people of his dis- 
trict, irrespective of party, were proud of him, and it was a fine 
thing that his life of toil and endeavor was so richly rewarded. 
He was proud to be sent to Congress, of course, but his ambition 
was not political. It was to give to his children that which had 
been denied him; and by doing his evident duty day by day he 
lived to learn that sometimes people reward right purpose of 
mind and faithfulness to principle. Along those lines came Mr. 
Connell's success. As he himself would write of another note- 
worthy man, " His whole career typifies American opportunity." 

"American opportunity! " How Connell proved those words. 

He wrote many comforting words in this newspaper to those in 
sorrow. We wish now that we could comfort his sorrowing ones 
as he has ours. We can only say simply that we are sorry our 
friend is dead. 



[54] 



Proceedings in the Senate 

Thursday, December 5, 1912. 

A message from the House of Representatives, by J. C. 
South, its Chief Clerk, communicated to the Senate the 
intelligence of the death of Hon. Richard E. Connell, late 
a Representative from the State of New York, and trans- 
mitted resolutions of the House thereon. 

Mr. Root. Mr. President, I ask that the resolutions of 
the House of Representatives on the death of the late 
Representative Connell may be laid before the Senate. 

The President pro tempore. The Chair lays before the 
Senate resolutions of the House of Representatives, which 
will be read. 

The Secretary read the resolutions, as follows: 

In the House of Representatives, 

December 2, 1912. 

House resolution 716 

Resolved, That the House of Representatives has heard with 
profound sorrow of the death of the Hon. Richard .E. Connell, 
late a Representative from the State of New York. 

Resolved, That the Clerk be directed to communicate these reso- 
lutions to the Senate and transmit a copy thereof to the family of 
the deceased. 

Mr. Root. Mr. President, I offer the following resolu- 
tions, which I send to the desk, and ask for their present 
consideration. 

The President pro tempore. The Senator from New 
York oft'ers resolutions, which will be read. 



[55] 



Memorial Addresses : Representativ'E Connell 

The resolutions were read, considered by unanimous 
consent, and unanimously agreed to, as follows: 

Senate resolution 402 

Resolved, That the Senate has heard with deep sensibility the 
announcement of the death of Hon. Richard E. Connell, late a 
Representative from the State of New York. 

Resolved, That as a further mark of respect to the memory of 
those Representatives (Hon. Richard E. Connell, of New York; 
Hon. Carl Carey Anderson, of Ohio; and Hon. George H. Utter, of 
Rhode Island) whose deaths have been announced the Senate do 
now adjourn. 

Thereupon (at 6 o'clock and 5 minutes p. m.) the Senate 
adjourned until to-morrow, Friday, December 6, 1912, at ^ 
12 o'clock m. 



Monday, February 17, 1913. 
A message from the House of Representatives, by J. C. 
South, its Chief Clerk, transmitted to the Senate resolu- 
tions of the House on the life and public services of Hon. 
Richard E. Connell, late a Representative from the State 
of New York. 



^ 



[56] 



— — »__™,„™^. . 

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS t^ 




